Staging
v0.8.1
Revision 070fae6d0ff49e63bfd5f2bdc66f8eb1df3b6557 authored by Christian Heimes on 02 July 2019, 18:39:42 UTC, committed by Ned Deily on 02 July 2019, 18:42:08 UTC


ssl.match_hostname() no longer accepts IPv4 addresses with additional text
after the address and only quad-dotted notation without trailing
whitespaces. Some inet_aton() implementations ignore whitespace and all data
after whitespace, e.g. '127.0.0.1 whatever'.

Short notations like '127.1' for '127.0.0.1' were already filtered out.

The bug was initially found by Dominik Czarnota and reported by Paul Kehrer.

Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>



https://bugs.python.org/issue37463
1 parent dcc0eb3
Raw File
makexp_aix
#!/bin/sh
#
# ===========================================================================
# FILE:         makexp_aix
# TYPE:         standalone executable
# SYSTEM:	AIX 3.2.5 and AIX 4
#
# DESCRIPTION:  This script creates an export list of ALL global symbols
#               from a list of object or archive files.
#
# USAGE:        makexp_aix <OutputFile> "<FirstLine>" <InputFile> ...
#
#               where:
#                      <OutputFile> is the target export list filename.
#                      <FirstLine> is the path/file string to be appended
#                         after the "#!" symbols in the first line of the
#                         export file. Passing "" means deferred resolution.
#                      <InputFile> is an object (.o) or an archive file (.a).
#
# HISTORY:
#		3-Apr-1998  -- remove C++ entries of the form Class::method
#		Vladimir Marangozov
#
#               1-Jul-1996  -- added header information
#               Vladimir Marangozov
#
#               28-Jun-1996 -- initial code
#               Vladimir Marangozov           (Vladimir.Marangozov@imag.fr)
# ==========================================================================

# Variables
expFileName=$1
toAppendStr=$2
shift; shift;
inputFiles=$*
automsg="Generated automatically by makexp_aix"
notemsg="NOTE: lists _all_ global symbols defined in the above file(s)."
curwdir=`pwd`

# Create the export file and setup the header info
echo "#!"$toAppendStr > $expFileName
echo "*" >> $expFileName
echo "* $automsg  (`date -u`)" >> $expFileName
echo "*" >> $expFileName
echo "* Base Directory: $curwdir" >> $expFileName
echo "* Input File(s) : $inputFiles" >> $expFileName
echo "*" >> $expFileName
echo "* $notemsg" >> $expFileName
echo "*" >> $expFileName

# Extract the symbol list using 'nm' which produces quite
# different output under AIX 4 than under AIX 3.2.5.
# The following handles both versions by using a common flagset.
# Here are some hidden tricks:
# 1. Use /usr/ccs/bin/nm. Relevant to AIX 3.2.5 which has
#    another version under /usr/ucb/bin/nm.
# 2. Use the -B flag to have a standard BSD representation
#    of the symbol list on both AIX 3.2.5 and AIX 4. The "-B"
#    flag is missing in the AIX 3.2.5 online usage help of 'nm'.
# 3. Use the -x flag to have a hex representation of the symbol
#    values. This fills the leading whitespaces on AIX 4,
#    thus simplifying the sed statement.
# 4. Eliminate all entries except those with either "B", "D"
#    or "T" key letters. We are interested only in the global
#    (extern) BSS, DATA and TEXT symbols. With the same statement
#    we eliminate object member lines relevant to AIX 4.
# 5. Eliminate entries containing a dot. We can have a dot only
#    as a symbol prefix, but such symbols are undefined externs.
# 6. Eliminate everything including the key letter, so that we're
#    left with just the symbol name.
# 7. Eliminate all entries containing two colons, like Class::method
#

# Use -X32_64 if it appears to be implemented in this version of 'nm'.
NM=/usr/ccs/bin/nm
xopt=-X32_64
$NM -e $xopt $1 >/dev/null 2>&1 || xopt=""

$NM -Bex $xopt $inputFiles					\
| sed -e '/ [^BDT] /d' -e '/\./d' -e 's/.* [BDT] //' -e '/::/d'	\
| sort | uniq >> $expFileName
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